The Committee For Monetary Research & Education (CMRE) will be holding a discussion on June 6th at the University Club in New York. The topic is China and the Credit Challenge, which should be even more interesting given this weekend’s economic update from China.
CMRE brings some of top minds on credit and geopolitics to discuss the likelihood and dangers of a credit collapse in China, the effects that would be felt on the global monetary system, the effects on U.S./Asian geopolitics, and and how the monetary principles of a president Clinton or Trump would direct the U.S. policy response.
I’m not sure I qualify as a “top mind” but I will be participating on a panel along with James Nolt, Campus Dean of the New York Institute of Technology Nanjing Campus and a senior fellow of the World Policy Institute, moderated by Valentin Schmid Business Editor of the Epoch Times, trying to determine China’s vulnerability to financial imbalances. Guaranteed eurodollar dissection.
Anyone in or around New York early next month is encouraged to attend, as the second panel will also discuss monetary and economic policy potential from each of the remaining US political candidates before closing remarks by former Secretary of the Navy and US Ambassador to the Nethelands William Middendorf.
Tickets are available here. The event program can be found here.
The Committee for Monetary Research & Education seeks to promote greater public understanding of the nature of monetary processes and of the central role a healthy monetary system plays in the well-being, indeed, in the very survival of a free society. The Committee is a non-profit educational organization. Its ability to carry out these purposes depends entirely on voluntary support from the public.
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